Post on 07-Jan-2016
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transcript
Valley Hope Association
Accessible Care Effective Support Services
AC/ESS Programming
HOLLY KREBSBACH, MS, LPC, LISAC
CORPORATE CLINICAL SUPERVISOR
OUTPATIENT SERVICES
Objectives
1. Definition of internet therapy
2. Guidelines for internet therapy
3. Resistance in the counseling field
4. Multi-Modality approach
5. Valley Hope Accessible Effective Support Services (AC/ESS)
What is Online Therapy Online or Internet therapy or counseling, Is referred to as
ongoing, interactive, text-based, electronic communication between a client and a mental health professional aimed at behavioral or mental health improvement.
Telehealth can be defined as the use of
telecommunications and information technologies to provide access to health information, assessment, diagnosis, intervention, consultation, supervision, education, and follow-up programs across geographical distance (Glueckauf, Pickett, Ketterson, Loomis, & Rozensky, 2003; Glueckauf, Whitton, & Nickelson, 2002; Liss, Glueckauf, & Ecklund-Johnson, 2002; Nickelson, 1998).
E-therapy is defined as “…a new modality of helping people resolve life and relationship issues. It utilizes the power and convenience of the Internet to allow simultaneous (synchronous) and time-delayed (asynchronous) communication between an individual and a professional” Grohol (1999).
Common terms: E-therapy, online counseling, cyber therapy, web counseling, and computer-mediated psychotherapy.
Online Therapy
Synchronous Environment Provide a real-time link between users
computers Shared Hypermedia – Instant messaging
Asynchronous Environment Occurs when communication is not
simultaneous or in live time
Similar to message boards
Guidelines for Online Therapy
ACA, AMA, APA, and AMHCA have all published specific internet guidelines or advisory statements for their members and many others have embedded guidelines for e-therapy in their code of ethics. Informed Consent –MD – explanation of treatment
services, counselor scope of practice, risks, alternatives for care, expectations.
Clinical practice-operating procedures Emergencies – patients at risk, exploitation, neglect
State Guidelines vary from one state to another Informed Consent, Mandatory disclosure, minimum
requirements for computer program, emergency plan for patients in crisis, emergency plan for technical problems, record of closest mental health agency, explanation of risks, grievance process.
Reasons for Resistance
Expressed opinions about whether professional therapy can be done without face-to-face interaction
Ethical issues involving client protection
Unclear legal jurisdiction
Regulatory and licensure issues
Confidentiality of computer-based messages is compromised without encryption and user passwords
Reasons for Resistance
Verification of the age, gender, and honesty of consumer disclosures is complicated
Need for careful self-assessment of areas of professional competence and computer skills prior to the initiation of any online clinical service.
Reasons for Resistance
Obstacles to getting help to e-clients in crisis or at risk for harming others is also a serious ethical issue for e-therapists who may be thousands of miles (and several time zones) away from the client.
Possibility of technological failure always exists
Research
A majority of e-therapy web sites have been developed by people identifying themselves as mental health professionals, though they are not. High level of non-compliance with informed consent and all other APA guidelines.
Studies comparing e-therapy with traditional psychotherapy, suggest that some people find it easier to self-disclose on the computer than in face-to-face situations.
Therapeutic alliances in e-therapy are similar to the alliances formed in face-to-face treatment .
Studies comparing traditional therapy with e-therapy found that e-therapy outcomes generally parallel traditional service.
Some consumers seem to find the convenience, economy, and relative anonymity of e-therapy attractive.
Heinlen, K., Welfel, E., Richmond, E., & O'Donnell, M. (2003). The nature, scope, and ethics of psychologists' e-therapy Web sites: What consumers find when surfing the Web. Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, Practice, Training, 40(1), 112-124.
HIPPA Requirements
Electronic Means of Communication
HIPPA required confidentiality
Patients are protected as cited by federal laws: (See 42 U.S.C. 290dd-3 and 42 U.S.C. 290ee-3 for
Federal laws and 42 CFR, Part 2 for Federal Regulations).
Releases of information disclosure only unless there is a threat to self or others
Valley Hope’s Compliance
Patient signs a consent for treatment Detailed outline of treatment services, electronic means
info, grievance, cost of treatment, limitations and risks-outline expectations.
Mandatory Disclosures Confidentiality Website is secure Access to the website done by authorization only Encrypted website Three levels of security Time out for patients inactive in the system All inclusive website: Electronic documents, private
messages, group discussion and individual assignments are transmitted within this website only.
AC/ESS Programming
Intention of developing program is to reach populations that are underserved Rural areas
Physical disabilities or ailments that prohibit attendance of traditional outpatient programming
Driving restrictions
Work schedule that prevents patients from consistently attending traditional programming
Unique circumstance where outpatient would not be feasible
Removes Barriers to Treatment for patients /family
AC/ESS Programming
AC/ESS programming is a multi-modality program. Includes in person clinical assessment, treatment
planning, additional assessment for appropriateness for the AC/ESS program and individual sessions.
Phone therapy when sessions are not able to be done in person
Online therapy room with group members
18 modules includes individual lectures and assignments
Individualized treatment
AC/ESS IOP
Intensive Outpatient Programming (IOP) 9 hours per week of therapy
Individual, marital and family sessions as it pertains to the addiction
Chaplain sessions offered
Family program attached to the IOP program
Additional Features Offline attendance – counselors can input time spent with
the patient in treatment planning, individual sessions, family sessions, and chaplain. This adds to cumulative total for an accurate account of time per week spent in IOP.
Survey results – IOP and CC patients are asked to take a Please Help US survey at specific times in their treatment episode. This helps Valley Hope to gather recovery data and patient satisfaction data. This can be submitted anonymously.
IOP the survey is given at admission, 3 weeks and 6 weeks into treatment.
CC the survey is given at 3, 6,9, and 12 months.
Supervisors have access to staff attendance and staff private messages. Supervisors can also view journals.
AC/ESS Family IOP
Created for family members to be involved in a primary level of care.
Length of program is 3 weeks
9 hours per week
1 individual face to face session or phone session per week
Chaplain availability
Family sessions available
Daily discussion topic in therapy room
11 Educational modules in online therapy room with lectures and assignments that must be completed each week.
Group therapy in the online therapy room
Private message communication in online therapy room
AC/ESS Continuing Care
1 hour per week of online therapy
Individualized treatment for level one programming
Phone or in person therapy offered
AC/ESS Concurrent Programming
Patients attend on ground group therapy once per week and online one hour per week.
Two hours of group therapy per week for one year.
Accountability increased
Accessibility to counselors and group increased.
Flexibility to both options is attractive to patients.
Data for AC/ESS
After two years of programming data was gathered
Compared four data sets of 50 patients in each set
The data set was on ground IOP, on ground continuing care, AC/ESS IOP and AC/ESS continuing care.
Demo Room for IOP
Demo Room for IOP
Demo room for IOP
Data for Length of Stay
Compared length of stay for continuing care
Average length of stay (ALOS) for patients discharged from AC/ESS continuing care was 28.8 weeks in treatment compared to 19.01 weeks in treatment for patients discharged from on-ground continuing care.
Length of Stay for IOP
AC/ESS comparative to on ground Services
At 5.54 average weeks in treatment AC/ESS patients length of stay is greater than the 4.24 weeks in treatment reported for on-ground patients.
Sobriety Data
74 percent of AC/ESS CC (continuing care) patients remained sober through the entire treatment episode compared to 62 percent of the on-ground patients.
Similarly, 80 percent of AC/ESS IOP patients remained sober through the entire treatment episode compared to 58 percent for on-ground patients. The results were similar for the other sobriety measures.
Sobriety Data
AC/ESS patients were less likely to relapse than on-ground patients and the rate of sober discharge was higher for AC/ESS patients than for on-ground patients.
Family Participation
In the AC/ESS IOP family program, family member data showed the following: 45 out of the 50 AC/ESS IOP patients episodes
included family participation. For on-ground patients 29 out of 50 episodes included family participation.
This may be due to flexibility of program.
Could eliminate the shame or fears of expressing feelings around addiction for family.
Removal of barriers
New Statistics for AC/ESS Time between online logins
1.48 Days
Average Minutes Per Session 25.41 Minutes
Average Sessions Per Week 4.73 Per week
Average Minutes Per week 120.2 Per week
New Statistics for AC/ESS
Data shows that patients log on frequently
Average is 25 minutes per log in
Patients average 2 hours per week online
Data are from the sample of actual AC/ESS continuing care patients that were active on 8/16/2010 after removing 3 percent of the largest outliers and 3 percent of the smallest outliers as measured by days in treatment since admission, count of sessions logged, and total login time. The result was n=311. The 18 outlier records were removed from the sample to ensure data showed typical program results.
Summation of Data
Valley Hope has delivered care via the AC/ESS option for more than four years and the outcome data clearly suggest that AC/ESS produces treatment outcomes on the various measures included in this report that are equal to or more effective than the outcomes produced by on-ground treatment programs.
DUI Programming
DUI Screening Must be conducted in person
DUI Education 16 hours of group and individualized
programming
DUI Treatment
32 hours or more of DUI treatment
First online DUI program in the State of Arizona
Questions?
For further questions on this program please email Holly Krebsbach at hollyk@valleyhope.org.
Visit our website at www.valleyhope.org